PAGE 12
Playing Dead
by
Instead of the detective denouncing him, he would denounce the detective. Of the police he would become an ally. He would call upon them to arrest a man who was planning to blackmail Mrs. James Blagwin.
Unseen by Jimmie, in the arm of his throne he pressed an electric button, and in the front room in the ear of the blonde a signal buzzed. In her turn the blonde pushed aside the curtains that hid the door to the front hall.
“Pardon, Highness,” she said, “a certain party in Wall Street”–she paused impressively, and the prince nodded–“wants to consult you about his Standard Oil stock.”
“He must wait,” returned the prince.
“Pardon, Highness,” persisted the lady; “he cannot wait. It is a matter of millions.”
Of this dialogue, which was the vehicle always used to get the prince out of the audience-chamber and into the front hall, undoubtedly the best line was the one given to the blonde–“it is a matter of millions!”
Knowing this, she used to speak it slowly and impressively. It impressed even Jimmie. And after the prince had reverently deposited his globe upon a velvet cushion and disappeared, Jimmie sat wondering who in Wall Street was rich enough to buy Standard Oil stock, and who was fool enough to sell it.
But over such idle questions he was not long left to meditate. Something more personal demanded his full attention. Behind him the prince carefully had closed the door to the front hall. But, not having his crystal globe with him, he did not know it had not remained closed, and as he stood under the hall stairs and softly lifted the receiver from the telephone, he was not aware that his voice carried to the room in which Jimmie was waiting.
“Hello,” whispered the prince softly. His voice, Jimmie noted with approval, even over a public telephone was as gentle as a cooing dove.
“Hello! Give me Spring 3100.”
A cold sweat swept down Jimmie’s spine. A man might forget his birthday, his middle name, his own telephone number, but not Spring 3100!
Every drama of the underworld, crook play, and detective story had helped to make it famous.
Jimmie stood not upon the order of his going. Even while police headquarters was telling the prince to get the Forty-seventh Street police station, Jimmie had torn open the front door and was leaping down the steps.
Not until he reached Sixth Avenue, where if a man is seen running every one takes a chance and yells “Stop thief!” did Jimmie draw a halt. Then he burst forth indignantly.
“How was I to know he was honest!” he panted. “He’s a hell of a clairvoyant!”
With indignation as great the prince was gazing at the blonde secretary; his eyes were filled with amazement.
“Am I going dippy?” he demanded. “I sized him up for a detective–and he was a perfectly honest crook! And in five minutes,” he roared remorsefully, “this house will be full of bulls! What am I to do? What am I to tell ’em?”
“Tell ’em,” said the blonde coldly, “you’re going on a long journey.”
Jimmie now appreciated that when he determined it was best he should work without an accomplice he was most wise. He must work alone and, lest the clairvoyant had set the police after him, at once. He decided swiftly that that night he would return to his own house, and that he would return as a burglar. From its hiding-place he would rescue the missing will and restore it to the safe. By placing it among papers of little importance he hoped to persuade those who already had searched the safe that through their own carelessness it had been overlooked. The next morning, when once more it was where the proper persons could find it, he would again take ship for foreign parts. Jimmie recognized that this was a desperate plan, but the situation was desperate.
And so midnight found him entering the grounds upon which he never again had hoped to place his foot.